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NASA: Spacewalk set to fix faulty solar panel (STS-116)
AP on Yahoo ^ | 12/18/06 | Rasha Madkour - ap

Posted on 12/18/2006 7:38:17 AM PST by NormsRevenge

HOUSTON - The space shuttle Discovery crew was awakened by the Beach Boys hit "Good Vibrations" on Monday to get them ready for a day of work trying to shake loose a jammed solar energy array.

Two spacewalking astronauts were scheduled to work on the stuck solar wing, with instructions from their counterparts inside the international space station and in Mission Control.

It was to be the fourth spacewalk of this now 13-day mission. NASA added it to the schedule on Saturday after several attempts to fully fold the solar array were unsuccessful.

U.S. astronaut Robert Curbeam was poised to set a new record for the most spacewalks completed on a mission by a single crew member, this being his fourth. Swedish astronaut Christer Fuglesang, who paired up with Curbeam on two earlier spacewalks, will assist as Curbeam attempts to loosen stuck grommets on the 115-foot array.

The planned activity inspired the "Good Vibrations" wake-up music.

"Good morning, Discovery," Mission Control astronaut Shannon Lucid radioed up. "We sort of thought that the wakeup music this morning summed up our hopes for the day."

NASA began retracting the accordion-like structure on Wednesday to make room for some new solar arrays that must rotate to face the sun in order to generate electricity. The new arrays would kick in after astronauts rewired the station over two spacewalks.

Reconfiguring the orbiting space lab's interim power system to a permanent electricity grid was a primary goal of the Discovery mission. But the old array, part of the interim system, retracted only halfway before stalling. That was enough to allow the new arrays to rotate but NASA needs it to fold fully into a box so it can be moved to a permanent position on a later shuttle flight.

On the last scheduled spacewalk, which took place Saturday, Curbeam and Sunita Williams went to the array after completing their main tasks, and spent about two hours shaking the array, trying to coax apart the problem grommets. They partially succeeded and other astronauts were able to command the array to retract several degrees more. But more grommets got stuck and the spacewalking duo's time was up.

Asked by a reporter how important is it to get the arrays retracted, crew member Joan Higginbotham, who will be operating a crane-like robotic arm during the spacewalk, offered this assessment: "It's very important from a personal standpoint," she said. "I think we're all very Type A personalities — I think my crew would agree with me there — so we always like to accomplish the task that we are given."

The array could safely be left in its current configuration for a couple of months, but NASA managers decided to take advantage of the extra hands on deck and the flexibility in their time schedule to try and resolve the problem now.

"Of course it's a little more challenging because we haven't done the training on the ground for it, but we did have a lot of generic training for solar array wing deploy and retract," Curbeam said in an interview Sunday evening. "I have a pretty good feeling that we've got a good chance for success."

The robotic arm will take Curbeam to the trouble spots on the array, and he'll have a variety of tools with which to pry the grommets — and a guide wire that runs through them — free.

Curbeam said he'll treat the spacewalk like any other, but added, "Probably the most important thing is for us to keep in mind that since it's my fourth — and you tend to get more and more comfortable as you go along — just to make sure we don't make any mistakes."

Discovery is set to land on Friday, having left the space station with a 2-ton, $11 million addition installed and a new power system. They'll leave Williams on the space station as its newest resident and bring back her predecessor, German astronaut Thomas Reiter.


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: array; nasa; spacewalk; sts116
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To: Frank_Discussion

And why jettison? The dang shutle is about empty, on the way home.


101 posted on 12/18/2006 6:07:45 PM PST by patton (Sanctimony frequently reaps its own reward.)
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To: Frank_Discussion

Later, thank you.


102 posted on 12/18/2006 6:08:19 PM PST by patton (Sanctimony frequently reaps its own reward.)
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To: patton

I'm back (for a sec).

It would cost more money and take more time to refurbish it than to replace it with the spare we already have, or even to just build a new one. Let alone develop the proper cradles and tie downs to carry it in the payload bay. Not to mention you'd have to chop it into pieces if it failed with the arrays deployed to any degree, so it would fit.

Catch you tomorrow.


103 posted on 12/18/2006 8:21:25 PM PST by Frank_Discussion (May the wings of Liberty never lose a feather!)
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To: Frank_Discussion

Had to step away to do some Christmas shopping. Excellent news! When do they come home?


104 posted on 12/18/2006 8:40:59 PM PST by 2Jedismom (http://kimsbug.blogspot.com/)
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